Photos: Inside a Microsoft data center
CNET News' Ina Fried tours Microsoft's massive new Chicago-area data center during recent grand opening event.
Inside a container
Microsoft recently opened its Chicago Data Center. In its first phase, the ground floor of the facility is designed to hold up to 56 containers, each filled with anywhere from 1,800 to 2,500 servers.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Air skates
Although the containers are heavy (and even heavier when packed with servers), air skates allow them to be moved in place with just four workers. Eight hours later, the servers are up and running.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Second floor server room
The second floor of the Chicago Data Center is home to a more traditional server room consisting of racks of servers with cool air coming up from a raised floor.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
A lot to power
Building the data center required 2,400 tons of copper, 3,400 tons of steel, 26,000 cubic yards of concrete, and 190 miles of conduit.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Keeping cool
Although Microsoft aims to use ambient air when it can, it also uses chillers to keep the servers cool on hotter days.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Chill out
Keeping everything cool is made possible with 7.5 miles of chilled water piping.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Highly automated
Although the data center is massive, it is managed with a staff of 30 to 45, including custodial and security workers. Building the facility, however, generated roughly 3,000 construction-related jobs, with the peak workforce reaching around 1,100 workers.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Power hungry
Even with all its power saving techniques, the first phase of the data center can scale to 30 megawatts of critical power.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Filling up
Containers will eventually house two-thirds of the servers in the data center, with the more traditional server rooms upstairs accounting for the remainder.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
A big investment
Over time, Microsoft expects to invest $500 million in the Chicago facility, just one of several existing or planned data centers.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Powering Azure, Bing and more
Microsoft isn't saying just which services are being run out of Chicago, though the Bing posters that covered the second floor server rooms suggest one possible workload.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
Location, location, location
Microsoft and others in the industry place a huge premium on where they put their data centers, picking spots close to cheap abundant power, water, and other key ingredients. About 70 percent of a facility's economics are determined before you break ground, Microsoft executives said.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
The heartbeat of the Internet
"The hum, the background beat that you feel, it's really the heartbeat of the Internet," said Kevin Timmons, general manager of data center operations for Microsoft.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"
From the outside
An exterior view of the Chicago Data Center. Because Microsoft isn't looking to attract attention, there's no identification outside. Even on the inside it's hard to tell whose facility it is, unless you look closely at a couple art pieces that note they are from Microsoft's art collection.
Read more in our related article: "Inside one of the world's largest data centers"